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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesTake "I Wish," the latest from Japanese filmmaker Hirokazu Koreeda ("Still Walking," "After Life"). With this film, he does what the aforementioned titles do as well and proves that kids movies don't have to be dumb or only for the ADHD-addled mind of an adolescent. In fact, the film is made for adults. It just happens to be from the point of view of children, and in many ways, it captures the awkwardness, fun, fear and mostly carefree spirit of childhood. Family dynamics, friendship, the joy of food, brotherhood, divorce, separation, longing for connection -- who can't relate to some or all of those themes? They're explored by Koreeda with such a deft, nuanced hand that it seems as if the gifted filmmaker must know something we don't. It's probably more realistic that he's just a good listener; he pays attention to the little things. One thing's for sure: he clearly knows how to work with child actors, and he's successfully filtered all those themes through the perspective of children.
The boys hear a legend that their wishes will come true if they witness the first north- and south-bound bullet trains passing each other. When the western extension of the high-speed train network opens, Ryu and Koichi hatch a plan (with, of course, some friends along for the ride) to meet in Kumamoto where each kid can make their wish. The brothers want their parents to get back together so they can be a family again.
It's at the film's conclusion, when you may very well be reaching for a hanky to wipe those tears away (this writer's eyes were welling up; must have had an allergy issue or something), that Koreeda plays his most stylish cinematic hand. A quick succession of images -- some still, some barely moving -- are cut together in an absolutely beautiful montage that works as the perfect visual for the film's biggest theme, which up to that point was mostly hidden deep under the surface of the text. Often in life, especially in childhood, it's the small moments that count. Running to school with your friends, eating sponge cake with your grandpa, picking seeds from a flower, riding on trains. That's the good stuff. Koreeda knows this, and he makes a great case for this philosophy. His greatest gift to the audience here is allowing us to witness this realization as it dawns in these children. [A-]
This is a reprint of our review from the Vancouver International Film Festival.
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